Mahzor

New York Public Library

Churches

Sarajevo Haggadah

Mah Nishtanah

Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

Action

Torah as music

Ben Heine

Action

ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

Action

Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

Action

David Grossman

Ben Heine

Action

Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

Action

Dove

Ben Heine

Action

Two birds

Hoda Jamal

Action

Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

Action

Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

Action

Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

Action

Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

Action

Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

Action

Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

Action

Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for July, 2009

Seattle Jewish Community 2004 Derech Eretz Statement

Friday, July 31st, 2009
Derech Eretz Israel 2004 statement

Derech Eretz Israel 2004 statement

In the midst of the controversy over the Seattle Jewish federation letter sent to Kadima denouncing its hosting of Palestinian anti-Occupation cleric Canon Naim Ateek, Rainer Waldman Adkins referred in a JTNews interview to a “community protocol” that required those who created this letter to follow a path other than the one they chose.

When challenged by Rob Jacobs, StandWithUs’ Seattle director, who claimed my characterization of this document as an Israel Accord was a fiction and that the document didn’t exist–I decided to dig the document up. And guess what, the document that never existed was signed by none other than Rob Jacobs! Must be a case of severe memory loss. Or perhaps Rob only remembers those things it’s convenient for him to remember?

At any rate, here is the text of the Derech Eretz Israel Statement 2004 (pdf). You may click on the image to open the full sized version:

We represent a broad spectrum of opinion within the Jewish community. We frequently disagree on issues relating to Israel, including the best path towards security and well-being for Israel and the Jewish people.

Especially in trying times, such as during the upcoming Gaza disengagement, we expect vigorous debate and disagreement in Israel and between Jews everywhere, including here in Washington State.

While we have differences of opinion, we hope with this statement to make it very clear that Israel is always close to all our hearts and souls. Further, we are united in our commitment to respectful, constructive and civil dialogue concerning Israel. Such behavior strengthens our collective support for Israel and our community.

Therefore,
•We commit to practice Derech Eretz, exhibiting and nurturing respect and communication, trusting in each other’s good intentions, and rejecting personal or malicious attacks, as we debate issues pertaining to Israel, the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, peace in the Mideast, and the wider Jewish community.

Further, in spite of our differences, together we publicly state that we agree on several core principles:

• Israel has the right to exist, in peace, as the Jewish State.
•We support Israel’s efforts to maintain itself as a democratic and pluralistic society, despite the pressures faced both within and without.
• Israel has the right, as a sovereign nation, to secure and recognized borders, to defend itself, and to protect its citizens.
•We support Israel’s efforts to find a peaceful solution to the conflict in the Mideast.
•We fervently hope and pray for peace within Israel, among Jews everywhere, between Israelis and Palestinians, and between Israelis and all peoples of the region.

We therefore pledge ourselves to do all in our power to assist Israel in every way at this difficult time.

This is the pertinent phrase which Rainer referred to in expressing his disappointment with the federation’s attack on Kadima:

We commit to…exhibiting and nurturing respect and communication, trusting in each other’s good intentions, and rejecting personal or malicious attacks

A reasonable person would read that and imagine that the federation’s Israel committee, finding fault with Kadima’s hosting of Ateek would communicate that to the group in a timely and respectful way that would allow an exchange of views on the subject. The statement makes no mention of grandstanding or scoring propaganda points, which is clearly what Rob Jacobs and those who spearheaded the letter but who did not sign it, sought to do.

In fact, if I didn’t know better I might think that the letter might be an opening salvo in a campaign to delegitimize groups like Brit Tzedek and Kadima and prohibit them from participating in the deliberations of the Israel committee.

In Rob’s twisted interpretation of this document it was Kadima’s obligation to come to the Israel committee before it agreed to host the event. It’s incumbent on the Jewish progressive community to get a heksher to host events that might be controversial for Rob and other local Israel lobby groups.

Would you care to admit your error, Rob?

Israel Tightens Screws for War Against Iran

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
Israeli joint Red Flag exercise held this month with U.S. forces simulating joint fights against a common enemy (USAF/MSgt. Kevin J. Gruenwald

Israeli joint Red Flag exercise held this month with U.S. forces 'simulating joint fights against a common enemy' (USAF/MSgt. Kevin J. Gruenwald

There is a gradual process underway within Israeli military, intelligence and political circles which will lead to war with Iran.  The war will either be Israeli or American in origin.  I say war, because I believe that a series of attacks against Iran will set the stage for a long conflict between various sets of players in the west and Arab world.  In effect, this will become a war.

Such hostilities will not break out tomorrow or next week.  The groundwork has not yet been laid for such an attack.  That is why it is important to read the hasbara planted (and I mean this term deliberately) in Israeli and U.S. newspapers about the Iranian threat; why it is important to follow Congressional legislation introduced that would punish Iran just as the Bush administration instituted sanctions against Iraq before it invaded that country; why it is important to note the bellicose threats, rants and sloganeering coming from Israeli politicians, generals and their U.S. counterparts.  This is how war begins.

A few examples of how the Israeli government is waging a perception management campaign in this country leading up to an attack: several Israeli consular officials are urging Jewish communities locally to introduce Iran divestment initiatives.  What is especially ironic and pernicious about this notion is that the Israeli diplomats are deliberately attempting to turn on its head the international campaign to divest from U.S. companies aiding and abetting the Israeli Occupation.  It’s a classic diversionary campaign to deflect criticism of Israel’s illegal and unconscionable Occupation by raising a red herring of Iranian nuclear threat.

The Israeli consulate in at least one region is co-opting an only too wiling local Jewish community into hosting a conference featuring Israeli hawks arguing that Iran is THE most dangerous threat to world peace.  We’ve been down this road before.  We all know how this story ends–or at least how the Israeli war party wants it to end.  Which is why we are obliged say “No.”  We will not permit this to happen.

Today, Haaretz features two articles which perfectly reflect this hasbara campaign.  The articles aren’t necessarily correct analyses of current political reality.  But they are still important because they reflect what the Israeli sources for these articles WISH the reality would be:

The talks held in Israel this week by senior Obama Administration officials, which focused to a large extent on blocking Iran’s nuclear program, indicate that the Americans – influenced by the Iranian regime’s conduct toward the post-election unrest that began in early June – are for the first time showing more understanding for Israel’s view of events. The United States is more skeptical than before about the likelihood that a diplomatic dialogue, or even harsh sanctions should that option fail, will dissuade the Iranians from their goal.

Here is yet more speculative hasbara:

The U.S. is well aware that Iran is progressing, and that by mid-2010, it may pass another critical milestone, that of being able to detonate a nuclear device for the first time.

Note the critical “may” in this sentence which could mean anything or nothing.  The road to war is filled with such empty phrases.  When you read this propaganda, just remember all the lies and wishful thinking that accompanied Bush administration bellowing about Iraqi WMD.  It happened once, it could happen again.

WINEP, the Mossad’s unofficial U.S. think tank, is playing its proper role as water-carrier for war:

As noted this week by Michael Singh, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, America’s message on this matter is still unfocused and confused. A senior American official comments on the Iranian nuclear threat and a possible preemptive Israeli strike almost every week, but all those statements provide no clear line on either Israel or Iran.

Isn’t it interesting that your political opponent’s policies are always unfocused, weak, confused, vacillating when they don’t agree with your own.  But as soon as Obama gets on board the good ship War, his policies will become miraculously clear, sharp and focused.

This Haaretz article furnishes further proof that Israel simply has no clue what impact it has within the Arab world.  It seems to believe it and the U.S. can play good cop-bad cop and somehow attain their goals:

Though it seems the red light on an Israeli attack still stands, the recurrent warnings by Israel’s prime and defense ministers about all options being on the table actually serve American interests: They allow Obama to wave the Israeli stick at the Iranians as part of his effort to get the Iranians to agree to a dialogue, and possibly even to concessions.

These numbskulls actually believe that seeing Israel wave the threat of nuclear warheads and F-16s at Ayatollah Khameini will create the proper setting for “dialogue and even concessions.”  What are they smokin’?  Getting Israel anywhere near this issue is like waving a red flag in front of a mean, ornery bull.  Doing so will get a matador gored but good.

The second Haaretz article outlines the Ross approach to ratcheting up the war rhetoric:

U.S. National Security Advisor James Jones, who is now in Israel to discuss Iran’s nuclear program, indicated that Tehran has until the UN General Assembly in the last week of September to respond. U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates delivered a similar message during his visit here earlier this week. If no satisfactory answer is received, the Americans said, they would work to form an international coalition to impose harsh sanctions on Iran…New sanctions would mainly aim to significantly curb Tehran’s ability to import refined petroleum products.

Jones and his team reported that a bill by Senator Joe Lieberman to curb sales of refined oil products to Iran is almost complete, and 67 senators have already signed it.

The Americans are proposing financial sanctions such as banning insurance on trade deals with Tehran, which would make it difficult for Iran to trade with other countries. They also want to impose sanctions on any company that trades with Iran and use this to pressure other countries, mainly in Asia, to resist making deals with Iran.

In the next stage, the Americans will consider even harsher sanctions, such as banning Iranian ships from docking in Western ports and, as a next step, banning Iranian airplanes from landing in Western airports.

The article closes with the rather startling announcement that National security advisor Jim Jones told the Israelis that Pres. Obama will personally travel to China in an attempt to persuade that country to end its opposition to a sanctions regime.  Frankly, I’m astonished that an American president would act as an errand boy on Israel’s behalf.  Not to mention, that he hasn’t a ghost of a chance of persuading China that it should dump Iran and facilitate a possible Middle East war.

So the next stage in Israel’s campaign is to decimate (at least it is hoped by advocates) the country’s economy and either cause the Iranian leadership to say “uncle” and give up its nuclear program; or cause the overthrow of the clerical regime.

Let’s leave aside the sheer lunacy of the thinking behind this plan and state in no uncertain terms that all progressives must unalterably oppose sanctions against Iran.  Even if we believe that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons, we must oppose sanctions because it is Israel’s road to war.  We must not allow Israel to hijack the west on behalf of this insane military adventure.  We must say “No.”  We’ve tried eight years of military adventurism in the Middle East and it didn’t work.

If there is any truth to the implications (and we have no idea of knowing that there is) in these articles that the U.S. is coming closer to the Israeli position, then we must tell the Obama administration that it is wrong.  We may be Obama’s allies on many issues.  But we cannot be on this one.  We cannot be accomplices to war.

Seattle Federation Smears Canon Ateek: the Full Monty

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Finally, I have secured the full Seattle Jewish federation letter attacking Kadima just before it hosted Palestinian anti-Occupation cleric, Canon Naim Ateek here in Seattle earlier this month.  Here it is:

Rainer Adkins [sic]
Kadima
xxxxxxx
Seattle, WA  xxxxx

Dear Rainer,

It has come to our attention that Kadima will be hosting Naim Ateek, founder of Sabeel on July 18th. We are greatly concerned about this choice of speakers.  Ateek does not present the facts of the Arab/Israeli conflict in a balanced or even-handed manner, nor does he promote peace and justice. His writings and speeches are filled with factual errors, misrepresentations, material omissions and distortions, and he portrays Jews and Israelis in the harshest light possible.

To be clear, we are not arguing your own stance on Israel’s policies. We are writing because we believe that hosting this “wolf in sheep’s clothing“ goes too far. Kadima is the first Jewish agency in over 30 years to sponsor a forum for his ideas.

Ateek reveals his own bias and racist attitudes with overt stereotyping of Jews and Israelis as inherently immoral, racist, violent, and conspiratorial.  It does a disservice to members of your own organization and the community supporting Israel to lend legitimacy, to his words by providing a platform for Ateek’s inherent anti-Jewish and anti-Israel message.

On your own website, you suggest that bringing Ateek reflects Kadima’s “commitment to building bridges for understanding and dialogue, whether in agreement or disagreement.”  We, the undersigned, do not understand why you would want to build a bridge with someone who espouses such flawed and racist anti-Israel and anti-Jewish positions, and we vehemently oppose any support for this pretext of “bridge building.”

Sincerely,

Richard Fruchter, Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle
Carolyn Hathaway, Hadassah, Immediate Past President
Daniel Weiner, Temple De Hirsch Sinai
David Brumer, Director of Social Services, Kline Galland Home, Executive Committee member of SWU/NW & AJC/Seattle Chapter
Rob Jacobs, StandWithUs
Jordan R. Assouline
Sandy Berger
Linda Capeluto
Sharon Finegold
Bernel Goldberg
Lorna Isenberg
Kim Greenhall

I have further learned that the Jewish Council on Public Affairs, a national Israel advocacy organization which heavily monitors Christian divestment campaigns and other allegedly anti-Israel activity, organized a national effort to shadow Naim Ateek on his tour of the U.S. Representatives from the Seattle community participated in the JCPA outreach effort. By the way, you’ll find no reference to JCPA’s anti-Ateek campaign on its website, a typical stealth effort.  At this point, the federation Israel committee only knew Ateek would be hosted by Christian congregations while here. This resulted in a follow-up effort by members of the Federation’s Israel Programming Committee.

On a separate, but related matter, local community leaders became exercised at what they perceived as the anti-Israel line of local groups like Kadima and Brit Tzedek. They contemplated rewriting the Israel Accord that had been formulated after two community leaders, Rob Jacobs and Rick Harkavy, played instrumental roles in the arrest of then Kadima Rabbi Drora Setel at an Israel Day rally.  [CORRECTION: Jacobs' predecessor as ADL director, Brian Goldberg was responsible for this and not Jacobs; and the Israel Accord I refer to above was written in 2004 in the context of the Gaza withdrawal, and not in the aftermath of the 2001 arrest of Setel and Jonathan Rosenblum]  The purpose of the reformulation would be to define a ”kosher” communal organization in such a way that Kadima and Brit Tzedek could be excluded from the committee and local activities around Israel.

Then when committee members heard Kadima planned to host Ateek at a Shabbat service, they decided to focus their efforts on this letter.

I have long wondered who spearheaded the letter. While JTNews was technically correct in saying it emanated from the Israel Program Committee. It actually was spurred by one particular member of the committee. And interestingly, his name isn’t even listed as a signatory. Apparently this individual, along with the group he represents, prefers to lurk in the netherworld and wield his hatchet behind the scenes, erasing any fingerprints before the blow falls. You could call this cowardice or not having the courage of one’s convictions. You could call this an attempt to preserve plausible deniability so you can tell the world in clear conscience that you and your group would never have anything to do with actions like this. At any rate, we have one chicken-shit communal leader here in Seattle.

I mistakenly accused Rob Jacobs of being the spearhead of the letter and he wasn’t. But Rob was involved in the letter from the beginning and enthusiastically endorsed it as did his capo di tutti, David Brumer.

Further, I note that there is no demurral on this letter indicating the individuals who list organizational affiliation do so without claiming to represent their organizations. This could lead us to believe that these signatories are speaking for their organizations in signing it. I would specifically address the Kline Galland Home and ask why David Brumer is using the organization’s name to denounce a group within the community on a subject that has nothing to do with Kline Galland’s mission. Does a Jewish retirement home need or want a senior staff member to weigh in on an internal communal dispute of this sort?

I have it on good authority that there were communal leaders who refused to endorse this letter.  To those who were solicited to sign and replied that the letter was a bad idea–you are a profile in Jewish courage.

I would ask the other leaders of this community who didn’t sign this letter–is this the kind of Jewish community you want here in Seattle?  Do you want to allow members of Stand With Us and other right-wing pro-Israel groups define ‘who is a Jew’ on this issue?  Or do you stand for diversity of opinion and viewpoint?  If the Israel committee speaks for most affiliated Seattle Jews then perhaps we progressive Jews who dissent from the Israel lobby standard line are the disenfrancised being told to go elsewhere?

Regarding the actual argument in this anti-Ateek letter, I have already critiqued much of its rhetorical garbage .

My final comment about the letter: you’d think if you wanted to attack a fellow leader of the community you’d bother to address them by their proper name: Rainer Waldman-Adkins and not Rainer Adkins.  Perhaps a small error (though Selma Waldman, Rainer’s mother, would not think so were she alive to read this), but a sign of the sloppiness of the entire endeavor.

I also want to take Kadima to task for its totally inadequate response to this affair. Some of the key leaders of the community are prepared to put you in herem and what do you do? You roll over and play dead. You need to re-examine the decision-making that led to your silence in the face of this attack. If I didn’t feel you were allies, I’d say your behavior was shameful. But since you’ve only hurt yourselves and your agenda within the community all I can say is how deeply pained I am at the inadequacy of your response.

I have not mentioned the source of all this information and will not to protect confidentiality.  Suffice to say, this is someone who knows what they’re talking about.

Freeman Family History

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

My wife’s grandfather was Eli Freeman, who was born in the Ukraine around 1895. He came to this country as a teenager and later brought his mother and two brothers here. One of my wife’s Detroit (where Eli initially settled) relatives sent us two amazing historic photographs which we’re trying to decipher. The first image above (middle) is of Eli (the older boy, standing) his brothers Harry and Max and his mother, Udel (my wife’s great-grandmother). We figure the photo was taken around 1907 when Eli still lived in the Ukraine.

The back of the card is filled with Yiddish script in faded ink which I asked archivist Jesse Cohen and the folks at YIVO to help decipher. Under their good auspices, they came up with a rough (there is also dark felt adhesive which further obscures the script) translation:

Your cousin is sending you this card of himself with mother and with the children, and is asking you very much to save/rescue [us?] with God’s help. I can write you [that] by us in Postev, by mother, I met …. I greet [you], and mother greets you [unreadable].

So this would be Eli writing to a cousin already in America begging for help in immigrating to America. If he wrote this in 1907, it would be only four years after one of the most heinous acts of anti-Jewish violence in the region, the 1903 Kishniev pogrom, in which scores of Jews were murdered in cold blood by Ukrainian Cossacks and rioters. The reason Eli begs for help is that he probably worries that his town could be next and seeks to emigrate before further violence engulfs his family. The pogroms spurred a mass Jewish exodus to America and other lands which eventually caused one-third of all Russian Jews to leave.

If anyone viewing the script (enlarged in this image) can further decipher it please leave your translation as a comment or e mail me.

As near as we can tell, the image of the single woman might be Eli’s grandmother. She clearly looks like a Ukrainian peasant, though aside from that it’s hard to tell. No one even remembers what her name was and she never came to America.

Israel Education System Disses Arab Students

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

I have often half-jokingly written here that Israeli nationalists and apologists will only be truly happy with Arabs when they get down on bended knee and sing Ha-Tikva, Israel’s uber-Zionist national anthem. Little did I know that right-wing Education minister, Gideon Saar, literally has this in mind. He decreed that all schools and all students, of whom 1 in 4 are Arab, will study a curriculum about the anthem. This despite the fact that Israeli Arab citizens detest the song and feel it disparages their identity and very existence:

Abir Kupty, Israeli Arab, who protested Israeli anthem on TV show

Abir Kupty, Israeli Arab, who protested Israeli anthem on TV show

Mr Saar’s initiative is widely seen among Israel’s 1.3 million Arab citizens as a further indication of the rising nationalistic tide sweeping policymakers.

…Arab citizens are unhappy with its heavily Zionist lyrics, which speak of how the “soul of a Jew yearns” to return to Zion, as well as referring to “The hope of two thousand years, To be a free nation in our land”.

…Abir Kupty, today an elected official with the Nazareth municipality, produced one of Israeli TV’s most talked-about moments four years ago when she was filmed sitting down when the anthem was played. She was the only Arab contestant in a show to find Israel’s future leaders.

Ms Kupty said: “This decision by the education ministry is part of the current hysterical right-wing mood in Israel. They hope they can erase our Palestinian identity by making us love the anthem.”

She added that Arab pupils were already deprived of the chance to learn about their own history, culture and identity. “The curriculum in Arab schools is heavily controlled by Jewish officials and by the security services.”

This is a perfect example of everything that is wrong with Israel: a pig-headed unwillingness to understand that if it wishes to be a democracy it must embrace, and not erase, the culture and ethnic identity of all citizens.  If Israel wishes to be a nation based on Jewish supremacism it should accept that it is not really a democracy.  Rather, it is a democracy only for its Jewish citizens.  For the 20% who are not, it is a deeply dispiriting, second class existence.  This is illustrated perfectly by the attitude toward Israeli Arabs within the education system:

Figures released by the education ministry this month show that only 32 per cent of Arab students passed their matriculation exam last year, compared to 60 per cent of Jewish students. The pass rate was a dramatic drop from the 50.7 per cent of Arab pupils who matriculated in 2006.

Yousef Jabareen, head of Dirasat, a Nazareth-based organisation monitoring education issues, blamed the poor results on growing cultural bias in the Israeli education system as well as severe budgetary discrimination.

He said the increasing weight placed on Jewish heritage and Judaism lessons put Arab pupils at a severe disadvantage, and that further alienation was caused by the state’s refusal to allow the Arab education system any autonomy in selecting its own curriculum.

A report published in March, he added, showed that the government invested US$1,100 in each Jewish pupil’s education compared to $190 for each Arab pupil.

If this were America, there would be an outcry from liberals about the inequity in such a system. Laws would be passed and court cases filed forcing a state to spend equally in every district and for every student regardless of ethnic background.

But where are the Jewish liberals now? Where is Jeffrey Goldberg? Where is David Harris? Where is Eric Yoffie? Where are the Jewish federations who claim they support Israel, as opposed to Jewish Israel?

Further evidence of Israel’s willful amnesia about the history and experience of its Arab citizens can be seen here:

Last week the ministry also announced that textbooks recently issued to Arab schoolchildren would have expunged the word “nakba”, or catastrophe, to describe the Palestinians’ dispossession at Israel’s founding in 1948.

What is the worth of a country that denies its history in such a way?  How has America’s similar denial of its racist past beggared ourselves as American citizens?  The truth is that every citizen must know the good and bad about his or her nation’s history if one is to be a full-fledged member of the polity.  A society which denies the existence of such a large number of its own members is truly impoverished.

H/t Rupa Shah.

Gay Porno Hasbara

Saturday, July 25th, 2009
Youve come a long way, Israel baby--welcome gay porno (Lucas Entertainment)

You've come a long way, Israel baby--welcome gay porno (Lucas Entertainment)

If Tablet Magazine is to be believed, the Jewish world has come a long way baby because the gay porno industry has made the first pornographic film with an all-Israeli/all-Jewish cast.  As strange and disturbing as I find this article on many levels, it is this passage which disturbs me most:

This week, Michael Lucas is making what he calls “a bold move to promote Israeli culture and tourism.” His website extols the virtues of a country rich with natural wonders, intriguing museums, liberal politics, and friendly locals. More than a biblical theme park, Lucas’s Israel is a tourist destination, a place where lovely beaches beckon and muscle-bound men have sex with each other.

Lucas—a porn actor and director, and founder of the New York-based gay porn production company Lucas Entertainment—sees his new film Men of Israel as a tool, if you will, to promote tourism, at least among gay men.


Make no mistake, this is not a one-off promotion by an odd-ball Jewish gay pornographer.  This is part of an orchestrated hasbara campaign spearheaded by groups like Stand With Us, who promoted Israel during the latter’s Gay Pride Festival as a natural ally of gays around the world.  The angle for SWU (and there always IS an angle with groups like this) is to trumpet the alleged homophobia of Palestinian/Arab society compared to the alleged freedom and tolerance of “western” Israel towards a gay lifestyle.  Never mind that Israel is less tolerant of gays than the average western country.  That matters little for the hasbaraniks of SWU.

Articles like the one in Tablet make clear the danger of choosing such bedfellows for Israel.  Remember the last major ‘heartthrob’ Israel embraced?  Those evangelicals like John Hagee, who supports a nuclear attack against Iran and claims the Holocaust was a message from God to Jews to become Zionists?

Does anyone in their right mind think that Israel will benefit from a close association with the gay porn industry?  And what was the Tablet editor who commissioned this article thinking?  This is a newsworthy story?  Bizarre, disturbing–yes.  But newsworthy?  But hey, I’m not complaining.  This blog thrives off chronicling the bad judgment of some of my fellow Jews.

Interesting to note that the film has been promoted by those connoisseurs of the gay lifestyle, Jeffrey Goldberg and James Kirchick (who Eric Alterman’s calls Marty Peretz’s “mini-me”). Goldberg takes the typically hasbarist line of comparing Israel’s supposedly tolerant attitude toward gays with the Arab world’s supposedly homophobic approach (I Bet Ahmadinejad Wouldn’t Let This Happen in Iran). This is why Goldberg is the Israeli foreign ministry’s favorite “liberal” (I use the term VERY loosely) Jewish journalist.

Jewish Council for Public Affairs ‘Stalks’ Naim Ateek

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Last week, a local progressive Jewish congregation, Kadima, hosted a Shabbat talk by Canon Naim Ateek, the Christian anti-Occupation activist from Jerusalem.  Ateek, supporter of a 2-state solution and advocate of non-violence has been demonized by the right-wing pro-Israel lobby for years as being “worse than Hamas.”  They see him as a special danger because he represents (this is their view, not mine) a reasonable, moderate and fraudulent face for the Palestinian movement.

CAMERA was the first group that made a career out of smearing Ateek, accusing him of being anti-Israel, anti-Semitic and calling Israel “Christ-killers.”  But if CAMERA’s mouthpiece, Dexter Van Zile, can be believed (and this is by no means a given), he’s gone on to hunt bigger fish and has little interest in Ateek anymore.  But it is instructive how Van Zile boasts of his abilities regarding mounting the smear campaigns for which CAMERA is notorious:

Naim Ateek has kind of fallen off of my radar to a certain extent, largely because people have figured out how to respond to them and it’s no longer necessary for me to teach them how to sing. They know the song by now and don’t need me to lead them.

The local Jewish federation sent a letter to Kadima decrying its decision to host Ateek before a Jewish audience.  The letter, such as I’ve been able to discern, contains the usual lies, distortions and half-truths about Ateek.  It’s quite shameful that any Jewish federation would stoop to such character assassination.  Among those who signed the letter are federation president Richard Fruchter, Rabbi Daniel Weiner, and Rob Jacobs, director of Stand With Us.  There may be other signatories, but the problem is that neither the federation nor Kadima has been willing to allow the public to see it.  Kadima’s choice is this matter is entirely baffling.  Most other groups would want to defend themselves vigorously and publicly.  Releasing the letter, one would think, would be a key part of a public relations/defense strategy.  Yet Kadima seems to feel maintaining a low profile is the best policy.  Frankly, I find the decision profoundly disappointing.

So far, JTNews is the only source which has been willing to divulge even snippets of the contents.  Here is what Joel Magalnick quoted:

“Ateek does not present the facts of the Arab/Israeli conflict in a balanced or even-handed manner, nor does he promote peace and justice. His writings and speeches are filled with factual errors, misrepresentations, material omissions and distortions, and he portrays Jews and Israelis in the harshest light possible.

“To be clear, we are not arguing your own stance on Israel’s policies. We are writing because we believe that hosting this ‘wolf in sheep’s clothing’ goes too far.”

While the Federation said in a statement to JTNews that “We maintain our support for the core principles that our local Jewish community holds,” Ateek “stereotypes Jews and Israelis as inherently immoral, racist, violent and conspiratorial” and his appearance at a Jewish organization lends him credibility.

A Kadima letter to its community also quoted a further phrase from the letter:

The position expressed in this letter is that Ateek’s attitudes toward Israel are so objectionable that dialogue with him is only a “pretext of ‘bridge building’” and “does a disservice to members of your own organization and the community supporting Israel.”

A conversation I had with a confidential source confirmed that though the federation was the titular leader of the effort behind the letter, the primary moving force behind it lay elsehwere.  Since the federation’s Israel Programming Committee acted on behalf of federation in this controversy and that Committee has an exceedingly chummy relationship with Stand With Us, I assumed that its two leaders, David Brummer and Rob Jacobs played instrumental roles behind the scenes.

Jacobs denies his and Brummer’s involvement except as a signatory.  Given their past history of lying about the substance of the I-97 divestment initiative and my own political beliefs, the former’s word is not exactly credible.

But I must be forthright in noting that Magalnick’s story lays much of the blame for the letter at the footstep of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, a leading Israel lobby group, one of whose main missions is to haunt the Christian divestment movement.  It appears that this is what motivated JCPA to shadow Ateek’s tour and lobby local Jewish communities to inveigh against him:

…The Jewish Council for Public Affairs, a national organization that in part advises Jewish organizations in promoting the…security of Israel, sent notification to communities Ateek visited with information about Sabeel and Ateek’s writings. The JCPA noted Sabeel’s work in promoting divestment campaigns as a tool for pressuring the Israeli government to end its occupation…

Background materials attacking Ateek and possibly wording of the letter itself came directly from JCPA.  So while Stand With Us is an enthusiastic endorser of this smear and participates actively in the federation committee that proposed the letter, it may be that JCPA played a more instrumental role than SWU.  It should be noted that this does not let SWU off the hook for reasons I’ve noted above.

Returning to the contents of the letter, it is rather extraordinary and chutzpadik to claim that Ateek is not “balanced or even-handed” in discussing the Occupation.  I’d challenge Jacobs and the other signatories to affirm that Israel is balanced and even-handed in its portrayal of its own role in perpetrating the suffering of the Occupation.  Was Israel balanced and even-handed when defense minister Ehud Barak and others portrayed its army as the “most moral in the world” after it killed 1,400 Gazans (1,100 civilians) during the January war?  Though I concede that Ateek is a partisan, he is no more partisan than Mark Regev, Maj. Avital Leibovich or any other Israeli spokesperson.  In fact, I’d contend that he is less partisan and much closer to the truth than they are.

The claim that Ateek does not “promote peace and justice” too is laughable.  Peace and justice for whom?  For Israeli settlers?  For IDF soldiers who committed possible war crimes during the Gaza war using white phosphorus in confined urban spaces, thus burning to death numerous civilians?  It’s SWU, CAMERA and JCPA’s job to promote these lost causes, not Ateek’s.

It is Ateek’s job to promote peace and justice for his own people, the Palestinians.   And that is what he does.  But he does even more.  He presents cogently and persuasively a brief arguing that a two state solution is in Israel’s best interests too.  Many (though not all) of Ateek’s views on how to resolve the conflict are even in line with the those of the majority of American Jews (though certainly not with SWU and the others).  I would argue that Ateek promotes peace and justice for both sides more honestly than Rob Jacobs or Dexter Van Zile.

The letter claims the Christian cleric “portrays Israelis and Jews in the harshest possible light.”  Again, more distortions.  First, Ateek has no brief with Jews or Judaism at all except as a motivating force behind the settler ideology.  So to claim he presents all Jews in a harsh light is entirely bogus.  As for Israelis, yes, he presents those supporting the Occupation in a harsh light.  But so do many Israelis themselves.  So if SWU and JCPA wish to condemn Ateek for this then they better condemn hundreds of thousands of Israelis who excoriate their government’s murderous policies toward the Palestinians.

The claim that the Palestinian liberation theology advocate “stereotypes Jews and Israelis as inherently immoral, racist, violent and conspiratorial,” is similarly baseless, empty rhetoric.  He says the OCCUPATION is inherently immoral, racist, and violent.”  And it is.  The forces of Israeli society who perpetrate the Occupation are engaged in immoral, racist acts.  That includes the IDF, intelligence agencies and Israeli government.  But it does not include all Jews or all Israelis and Ateek never makes such a claim.

In this letter and virtually all pro-Israel right-wing propaganda there is a fundamental confusion about criticism of Israeli policy.  Hasbaraniks like Jacobs, Van Zile and JCPA confuse criticism of policy with criticism of Jews (the bogus anti-Semitism charge) and of Israel itself.  They are not the same.  And the unwillingness to distinguish between the two highlight the fundamental fraudulence of their position.

‘U.S. Not Contemplating Sanctions Against Israel…at This Time,’ ‘Whoops, Did We Say That?’

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009
New settlement construction--worth U.S. sanctions? (Reuters)

New settlement construction--worth U.S. sanctions? (Reuters)

This is how the pros do it and the Clinton/Obama folk are pros, make no mistake:

The US State Department rebuffed speculation that the administration of President Barack Obama was considering imposing economic sanctions against Israel in order to prevent it from continuing West Bank settlement construction.

Spokesman Phillip Crowley told reporters on Thursday that remarks made by deputy spokesman Robert Wood earlier this week had been “misinterpreted.”

Asked at a press briefing on Tuesday whether the US was considering putting financial pressure on Israel to get it to comply with US demands, Wood had said: “It’s premature to talk about that.

I’ve written in the past about Obama gradually tightening a noose around Israeli settlement policy until gradually (or so the hope goes) there will be no choice but to accommodate to U.S. pressure to change it. And this is part of the process.

What is deft about this particular series of statements is that the U.S. both plants the idea that it may be willing to consider sanctions if all else fails; and immediately denies the import of the statement in order to make it appear it was a mistake. But the seed has been planted. Now everyone in the Netanyahu government and the Israel lobby is aware of what the next step could be. They know what’s in store if they continue trying to play hardball regarding the settlement freeze and related issues.